NOTE: Course offerings listed below are subject to change. 
All courses may not be listed here. Refer to the Spring 2008
schedule or glass case in front of English and Comparative
Literature Department office for the most current listing.

[Remember! our cool 500-level courses can be taken

by both undergraduates and graduate students! See
the catalogue for details!!]


Comparative Literature Undergraduate Courses


CLT 210                 Introduction to Comparative
Literature                   W. NERICCIO                
TTH   3:30-6:10pm

Greatest hits!  Cultural Studies! Gender Studies! Everything
but the Kitchen Sink!!!!

This wild and madcap Introduction to Comparative
Literature will NOT, REPEAT, WILL NOT clarify the
boundaries of Comparative Literature; in fact, it is our
sublime hope that students will leave this class convinced
that Comparative Literature is more process than product,
more wave than stone, more explosive than sedentary.  If
anything, you can think of this experiment as a four-month
odyssey guided by an oddly rigorous, eclectic wandering or,
alternatively, as a months-long exercise in aesthetic and
literary seduction.

Part of this is owing to the course design: each weekly
gathering features a different Professor and a different
text--around these parts, the CLT 210 is known as the test-
drive-a-professor seminar.  The variety does not stop there,
as some of our dynamic roster of scholars are not ONLY from
the Department of English and Comparative Literature--we
will draw our cohort of outstanding professors from across
the College of Arts and Letters.

The most delicious aspect of Comparative Literature as a
"field" or "fields" is that it supports aesthetic, intellectual
and cultural investigations that cross geographic and
institutional boundaries--it is that branch of literary study
most deeply invested in the collaborations that occur
between literature and the "sister arts."
So it is that Philosophers, Anthropologists, Editors, Poets,
Historians, Biblical Scholars and maybe even a Performance
Artist or two will enter our seminar this term to build
bridges between their domain and ours. In the end we may
find we share more than we understood to be possible. This
class is open to all majors, and while it is a requirement for
Comparative Literature majors, you may rest assured that
all curious, dedicated literature-starved wanderers will
find a home away from home here with us this semester.

This class is open to ALL majors and is required for our
very special undergraduate Comparative Literature majors! 
Graduate Students interested in auditing or taking this
course for Special Study Engl 798 credit should make an
appointment with chair of English and Comparative
Literature.




CLT 270B            World Literature                                                          
M. JAFFE
MWF   11:00-11:50am

CLT 270 B will explore themes embedded in Dystopian
literature and film.  Our principal focus will be on
representations of "horrific" societies to interrogate the
society in which we currently live—especially in relation to
concepts of freedom, individuality, community,
responsibility, "human nature," and scientific /
technological innovations.
Our texts and films will include the following:
    Nineteen Eighty-Four
    Brave New World
    The Handmaid's Tale
    Solaris
    Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? / Blade
Runner
    Jennifer Government
    Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)
    The Invasion (2008)
    They Live!
    A Clockwork Orange
    Pink Floyd: The Wall



CLT 405        The Bible as Literature                                           
P. KUHLKEN
TTH   9:30-10:45am

Catalog: Reading the poetry and prose of the King James
Bible.

This multidisciplinary, multimedia experience will
cultivate an appreciation and understanding of biblical
literatures in their historical, cultural, aesthetic,
philosophical, and theological contexts.  Using any
preferred Bible translation and The Literary Guide to the
Bible (eds. Alter/Kermode), we will consider the poetry,
philosophy, story, and prophecy in both the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible or
Old Testament) and New Testament, with selections
from the apocrypha and Dead Sea Scrolls.  We will analyze
the genres and strategies of biblical writing, the Bible’s
historical and cultural context, and canon formation.

As a foundation of culture—high or low—the Bible is
impossible to ignore. Biblical literacy is an unstated
assumption in much of literature (Homer, Shakespeare,
Dostovevsky, Dickinson, Flannery O’Connor, C.S. Lewis),
art (Rembrandt, Da Vinci, and Chagall), film (The Matrix),
and TV (Desperate Housewives), and the source of over 1,000
references in Shakespeare alone. While it has admittedly
held moral and religious sway over Judeo-Christian culture
for centuries, consensus among its subjects has never been
attained, nor will it be in this section. The goal
is for students to recreate, experience, understand, and
remember biblical stories as midrash, gaining insights
about what is meaningful and memorable: story.  Students
will approach the Bible with new questions and gain
a fresh, unbiased awareness about the enduring significance
of this best-seller, unsurpassed in world literature,
and undeniably present in our everyday realities. 


CLT
405    The Bible as
Literature           R. WHITAKER
TTH   12:30-1:45pm

Is the Bible literature?  Who wrote it?  When and why did
they write it?  How long did it take?  Are there different types
of biblical writings?  Are the biblical characters real?  Can
one truly read it with understanding?  These are just a
handful of the questions this course will examine.  To be
sure, every serious thinker must not only think-through these
questions, but also tackle the Bible itself.  It is no accident
that it tops the bestsellers list.  Within its covers, contain
tales of betrayal, sibling rivalry, murder, stories-within-
stories, comedy, tragedy, horror, melodrama, character
formation, sagas, end times, and romance.  The Bible is a
must read. 

This class is first and foremost an educational experience!  It
is truly a multidimensional, multidisciplinary, and multimedia
engagement with the Bible as a literary piece of art.  Besides
exposing the interplay between biblical content/form,
prose/poetry, and fiction/non-fiction, this class aims at
making each of us better literary critics: deconstructing
ourselves as we deconstruct the text.  If one leaves the class
thinking exactly the same way about the Bible as when they
entered, then the class has not done its job.  Although this is
not a biblical theology class, however relevant religious
motifs will be explored.  That is, this class is not meant to
support or repudiate personal convictions.  The Bible will be
studied as literature.  New trends in literary theory and
criticism of the Bible will be explored too – e.g. Marxism,
feminism, and post-colonial theory.  The Bible will be the
primary reading.  Individual books will be contextualized and
analyzed; while not losing sight of how the parts construct
the whole. 


CLT 513              Nineteenth Century European Literature                   
L. EDSON
TTH   9:30-10:45am

An investigation of 19th  century European literature that
includes close analysis of novels by Balzac, Flaubert, and
Zola, the poetry of Baudelaire, and the drama of Ibsen and
Strindberg. Issues to be discussed include realist
representation, the realist novel as portrait of society, the
politics of the family, the nature of desire, naturalism,
Symbolist poetry, and the semiotics of the theatre. In-class
writing assignments, oral reports, mid-term and final
exams.



CLT 530              Topics in Asian Literature 
(Women in Modern Chinese and Japanese Lit.)
W. ROGERS
TH 3:30-6:10pm 
   
CLT 530 will explore how Chinese and Japanese writers in
the 20th century (both female and male) have used the short
story to present/express/contest “woman” and “woman’s
place” in their societies. The critically-inflected question
to be considered, story by story, is how two (highly literate)
Asian cultures have constructed gender roles and how
writers have either replicated or challenged those roles. All
students with curiosity about non-western cultures and
literatures (and a sense of adventure!) should find much in
CL 530 to engage them, both conceptually and esthetically,
since the chosen stories are rich in human drama and
incident. Particular background or expertise in Asian
culture by students is NOT assumed by the instructor.

Requirements:  will include two examinations (one of which
will be take-home), a research essay, short written
responses, and active participation in class discussion.


CLT 561               Fiction                                                                      
L. EDSON
TTH   11:00-12:15am

 An investigation of the modern novel with special attention
to narrative voice, strategies of representation,the role of
language, perception, and issues of truth and authority.
Texts to be read include Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart,
Buchi Emecheta's The Bride Price, Albert Camus' The
Plague, Toni Morrison's Sula, Marguerite Duras' The Lover,
Michel Tournier's Friday, and Albert Camus' The Fall.

In-class writing assignments, oral reports, mid-term and
final exams.




CLT 561    Fiction                                                                        
J. FARBER
W   7:00-9:40pm       (European Children’s Fantasy Fiction)                   

 Let’s define terms.  “Fantasy” here is to be understood in
the broad sense: not just epic fantasy, but fantasy in
general.  “European”: we’ll be reading fiction from Great
Britain, Spain, Italy, Sweden, Finland, Germany, and Austria
(tentative list).  “Children’s”: All of the works on our list
will be novels that were written for young readers, and we’ll
be reading them in the context of the history of children’s
literature and in relation to some of the principal issues
that have been raised in the academic study of children’s
literature.  I hope that this course will be worthwhile both
for people who are pursuing a specialization in children’s
literature and for people who are just looking for a really
good comparative fiction course. 




CLT 580               Concepts in Comparative  (Studies Books in
the Mirror: Literature- Inspired Literature)                                 
TTH   12:30-1:45pm                                                
M. BORGSTROM

How do texts respond to other texts?  How do thematic
concerns translate across time and genre?  How might an
author's personal identity affect literary influence and
inspiration?  This course will examine these issues (and
several others) by comparing three pairs of texts.  Each
pairing will include one work from an earlier period (the
Renaissance, the late nineteenth century, and the early
twentieth century) and one work from the current era of
American letters.  Our readings will include the following
pairings: Shakespeare's King Lear and Jane Smiley's A
Thousand Acres; Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn and Jon
Clinch's Finn; Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway and Michael
Cunningham's The Hours.  We may also read literary
criticism devoted to these works (particularly analyses that
address the issue of textual influence). 

Assignments will likely include two essays, midterm and
final exams, and regular written responses to the readings.


English Undergraduate Courses


 ENGL 220            Introduction to Literature                                           
Q. BAILEY
MW   12:00-12:50pm

 “Sex, death, and literature”: A flying tour of some of the
greatest depictions of sex and death in Western literature.
From the passionate “friendship” between Achilles and
Patroclus, described by Homer in The Iliad, to the deaths of
adulteresses like Emma Bovary and Anna Karenina,
literature has fixated on moments of desire and death. As
Wes Craven’s Scream pointed out in 1996, such moments are
the pivots on which stories turn. Some of these scenes have
got writers prosecuted and books banned; others – like Don
Juan – have become part of the cultural fabric of our lives.
This course will look at these scenes and many more,
pulling on the resources of film, music, and painting, to
explore the emotions provoked by these works and the
literary techniques which produced them.         


ENGL 220                Introduction to Literature                                  
T. CUMMINGS
TTH   2:00-3:15pm

Want to be old-fashioned?         Want to be revolutionary?       
Let's be both.

In this Introduction to Literature class, we will use ancient
myths to understand contemporary change. We'll read four
myths and four recent novels. Each myth depicts a stunning
change; each novel depicts a dramatic social change. The
changes include how we think about war, sex, race, the
environment, and the role of women.

To help us explore the myths and novels, we'll use the ideas
of Paul Ricoeur, Julia Kristeva, and Carl Jung. Ricoeur says
we know ourselves through the stories we tell. So, these
myths and novels will help us understand how we talk about
our society's changes. Kristeva will help us dig deeply into
the comedic novels we'll read because she explores how
revolution requires comedy. Finally, Jung believed that
being human means we share experiences -- we live, we
grow, we change. That's an old fashioned idea, but it and the
others will help us organize our thinking about these
amazing novels and place them in an ethical, local context.

Our goal in this class will be to rise above any simple
formulations about change and to deepen our understanding
of our society through studying the literature of Morrison,
Murray, Winterson, and O'Brien.

Requirements: response papers, discussion, creative project,
two formal essays.




ENGL 220             Introduction to Literature                                        
P. HERMAN
TTH   12:30-1:45pm   (The Literature of Terrorism)

The purpose of this class is to introduce students, whether
English majors or not, to literature through an examination
of how literature has confronted the question of terrorism.
According to the catalogue copy, the point of this class is to
ask about the basic nature of literature. What purpose does
it serve in our cultural life? This class will seek to answer
these questions by examining how various writers and
artists have dealt with the pre-eminent question of our
time: terrorism. How has mainstream literature in the West
represented terrorism?   How have contemporary novelists,
filmmakers, and songwriters confronted 9/11 and similar
events? What makes terror “terror”? What does it do and
how does it do this? In the mainstream Western tradition,
terrorism is something outside of us, something beyond the
limits of civilizations and its institutions and values. 
Terrorism is what threatens us from beyond, be it a
supernatural monster, as in Beowulf, or from a cave in
Afghanistan. But literature is also supposed to envoice the
“Other”; it is supposed to take us outside ourselves and
experience viewpoints other than our own. What happens
when that viewpoint is that of someone, or something,
labeled “terrorist”? We will read such authors as William
Shakespeare, John Milton, John le Carrè, and Don DeLillo,
view a movie about terrorism, and hear Bruce Springsteen,
Toby Keith and Leonard Cohen.




ENGL 220              Introduction to Literature                                         
C. RICHEY
TTH   8:00-9:15am

English 220 provides an inquiry into the basic nature of
literature.  What is literature?  Why do we read literature?
Why do we study literature?  What prompts humankind to
the creation of imaginative literature?  What purposes does
literature serve in the cultural life of humanity?  What are
its social, philosophical, spiritual, and aesthetic values? 
We will be looking at four genres: short prose, poetry,
plays/dramas, novels.  We will also consider the techniques
and major critical theories, but the focus will be the
students’ response and understanding of the text. Grades
will be assessed by examinations, pop quizzes, a group
presentation and a critical essay.  The required texts
include the following:


The Norton Introduction to Literature
Reader
Oedipus Rex
A Doll’s House
Master Harold . . .  and the boys (video)
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Their Eyes Were Watching God
Things Fall Apart




ENGL 220             Introduction to Literature                                      
C. SHUMATE
MWF   9:00-9:50am
 
I take to heart a quote from the Greek philosopher Socrates: 
“The unexamined life is not worth living,” and this from
Marcel Proust in Time Regained:  “Real life, life at last laid
bare and illuminated—the only life in consequence which
can be said to be really lived—is literature.”  How is a 200-
year-old book relevant to those of us living in the 21st
Century, and what does it have in common with a current
popular television show? How can a classic fantasy novel
help us in our individual journeys through life, and in
adapting this novel for the silver screen, did the filmmakers
remain faithful to its themes?  These are some of the topics I
will introduce while we examine novels, stories, poems, and
plays for “lives worth living.”
 
Works to be included:
Shelley, Mary.  Frankenstein
Tolkien, J. R. R.  The Fellowship of the Ring (The Lord of the
Rings, Books I & II)

 Selection of stories, poems, and a play in Course Reader
available at Cal Copy   
 This course requires CPS Clickers for attendance, class
participation, quizzes, and tests.




ENGL 250A          Literature of the U.S.                                                 
J. BROOKS
MWF   9:00-9:50am

Forget Betsy Ross:  early America was a strange,
treacherous, and fascinating place.  This course introduces
students to literature written in the Americas from before
the arrival of Columbus through the Civil War.  We will
read writings by slaves, pirates, fortunetellers, soldiers of
fortune, coquettes, freedom fighters; men and women;
Black, white, and indigenous. 

Required texts:  Heath Anthology of American Literature,
5th edition, volumes A & B. 

Requirements: attendance and participation, response
papers, midterm, final.



ENGL 250B           Literature of the U.S.                                               
R. GERVAIS 
MWF   1:00-1:50pm

A survey of U.S. literature from just after the Civil War to
the present, covering Realism (1865-1895), Naturalism
(1895-1920, Modernism (1920-1950, and the Contemporary
Period (1950-present).  Four in-class, open-book, essay
exams.




ENGL 260A           English Literature                                                      
E. KUGLER
M   7:00-9:40pm

(Inventing Identities: creating individuals, others and
nations in literature of the British Isles)
In this survey course, we will explore a variety of literary
texts written in the British Isles from the Anglo-Saxon
culture that produced Beowulf through works of the
eighteenth century. One of the central questions of this
course will be how a text both reflects as well as shapes it
culture. What values does it hold as positive? How does it
define the members of its culture, and how does it mark
others as outsiders. Many of the texts went on to actively
shape their societies and still impact our popular culture
today. Looking at these texts, we will analyze how they
"invented" different terms of identity: what qualifies as
"human" in these texts; how do they define binary terms
such as "men" and "women," "civilized" and "barbarian,"
"native" and "alien;" what does it mean to be an
"individual"? In addition, we will connect these questions
to their historical contexts, especially to the on-going
conflicts over religion, state power and individual rights as
the fragmented, tribal British Isles changed into a set of
nations (with England emerging as the most powerful) and
finally into an imperial power. In addition to examining the
texts in relation to each other and their historical contexts,
you will be encouraged to link this work to your own
interests and perspectives.


ENGL 260B           English Literature (English Literature from the 19th through
the 21st Centuries: Narrative and Identity)     
MWF   12:00-12:50pm                      
E. FRAMPTON
  

This survey course introduces a variety of significant
British literary texts, produced between the nineteenth and
twenty-first centuries.  Our reading will include a range of
genres, including fiction, poetry, essays, and drama, which
we will historically and culturally contextualize,
attempting to come to terms with the immense social and
ideological shifts of this vast period.  We will structure our
exploration of this diverse span of literary history by
focusing our analysis on the relationship between narrative
and identity, asking why and how certain kinds of stories
are told, what kind of characters they represent, and what
kind of readers they, in a sense, create.  As a part of this
undertaking, we will interrogate the traditional
periodization that divides the literature of these centuries
into the “Romantic,” the “Victorian,” the “Modernist” and
the “Postmodern.”  The primary text through the semester
will be the concise edition of The Broadview Anthology of
British Literature, Volume B, but the course will conclude
with an examination of the 2005 multicultural,
transatlantic, intertextual novel On Beauty, by Black
British writer Zadie Smith. 



ENGL 301             The Psychological Novel                                         
R. GERVAIS
MWF   10:00-10:50am

A study of the psychological novel, which emphasizes the
internal state and development of the protagonist, rather
than external action or plot, exploring characters through
their emotions, fears, dreams, and fantasies.  In order to
accommodate more authors and themes, we shall be studying
some of the most significant novellas of modern Western
literature, rather than full-length novels.

We shall study the psychology of approaching death in
Tolstoy’s The Death of Ivan Ilych and Mann’s Death in
Venice; the psychology of encountering horror in James’s
The Turn of the Screw and Conrad’s Heart of Darkness; the
psychology of personal confessions in Dostoyevsky’s Notes
from the Underground and Camus’ The Fall; the psychology
of darkly comic dysfunctional families in Kafka’s “The
Metamorphosis” and Faulkner’s As I lay Dying; and the
psychology of a day in everyday life in Woolf’s Mrs.
Dalloway and Bellow’s Seize the Day.

There is no expectation that students will be familiar with
psychological theory before taking the course.  This is a
course in literature, not psychology, so theory will be kept
to a minimum and used only as needed, as we read and
discuss the novellas.   Five, in-class, open-book, essay
exams.


ENGL 302             Introducing Shakespeare                                     
T. CUMMINGS
TTH   3:30-4:45pm
 
Who is that guy?

What happens when you meet someone? You introduce
yourself, have a conversation, and find out a little bit about
each other. If you're engaged by the conversation you had,
you decide to spend more time together.

That's the main goal of this class: to introduce ourselves to
Shakespeare and to inspire such engaging conversation,
we'll want to get to know him well.

We'll read seven plays by Shakespeare. We'll talk about his
characters, plunge into his sometimes amusing, sometimes
shocking plots, and we'll learn how to understand his
language. Since most people who are intimidated by
Shakespeare say his language pushes them away, we'll listen
to recordings of his works. This is the best entry into his
language, and it will let us explore how he charges his
words with rich, enduring meaning. It's this meaning that
will encourage us to move past introductions and into a
lifelong friendship.

Requirements: response papers, discussion, creative project,
and two formal papers.



ENGL 306A           Children’s Literature and Advanced
Composition          
                                                   “For Liberal Studies
Majors”             
MWF 9:00-9:50am                                                                             
M. GALBRAITH                      

"Children's souls are the inheritors of historical memory
from previous generations. It's just that as they grow older
and experience the everyday world, that memory sinks
lower and lower."  (Hiyao Miyazaki) 
The finest works of children’s literature capture the
predicament of a child in the face of a huge older world—the
world of previous generations, living and dead.  Next
semester I want to approach and ponder the “presenting of
the past” in children’s literature.   Some of the books
planned (mostly available at the public library):
Holes--Louis Sachar
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn--Mark Twain
Howl’s Moving Castle--Diana Wynne-Jones (also the
Miyazaki movie)
Ender’s Game--Orson Scott Card 
Grandfather’s Journey--Allen Say
Where the Wild Things Are--Maurice Sendak
The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe--C S Lewis
Me in the Middle—Ana Maria Machado
The Watsons Go to Birmingham, 1963—Christopher Paul
Curtis



ENGL 306A         Children’s Literature                                                
P. SERRATO
TTH   12:30-1:45pm                

To your amusement, fascination, dismay, horror, and/or
surprise, this semester we will explore the fascinating
complexity of children’s literature. We will begin by
acquainting ourselves with some classics, such as Heinrich
Hoffman’s Struwwelpeter and E.B. White’s Charlotte’s Web.
Then we will look at some more recent works, including
David Levithan’s Marly’s Ghost, Juan Felipe Herrera’s
Downtown Boy, and Gloria Anzaldúa’s Prietita and the Ghost
Woman. With the books that we encounter we will of course
talk about race, gender, and sexuality—the standard holy
trinity of critical approaches that students and I take in my
classes. We will also explore how different genres create
different reading experiences for young people and we
generally will test your preconceived definitions of what
constitutes a “good” book for children. By the end of the
course you will wield a terrific expertise in children’s
literature that will allow you to think, talk, and write about
children’s literature in wonderfully sophisticated—and
perhaps unusual—ways.

Requirements: Include one paper, 2 exams, a final exam,
frequent in-class writing, and a presentation.

Required Texts
Heinrich Hoffman, Struwwelpeter  (Dover; ISBN
0486284697)
E.B. White, Charlotte’s Web (HarperTrophy 0064400557)
David Levithan, Marly’s Ghost  (Puffin 014240912X)
Laurence Yep, When the Circus Came to Town 
(HarperTrophy 0064409651)
Polly Horvath, When the Circus Came to Town  (Farrar,
Straus and Giroux 0374483671)
Juan Felipe Herrera, Downtown Boy  (Scholastic
0439644895)
Carolyn Keene, The Mystery at Lilac Inn  (Grosset & Dunlap
0448095041)
Gloria Anzaldúa, Prietita and the Ghost Woman  (Children’s
Book P 0892391677)
Roald Dahl, The Witches  (Puffin 014241011X)
Jim Murphy, An American Plague  (Clarion 0395776082)



ENGL 308W           Literary Study:  Analysis, Research and
Writing  
TTH   8:00-9:15am                                                                             
T. CUMMINGS

What is everyone talking about?

Do you turn your head like a dog trying to triangulate on a
sound at the baffling things people are saying about
literature?

Do you wonder what people really mean when they say the
author is dead. . . but one just gave a talk on campus?

Have postcolonialist studies scared you off even more than
cultural studies? Or felt that the New Historicists are
incredibly old-fashioned?

Well, now's your chance to sort through all these confusions
and questions.

In this class, we'll use the model of see one, do one, teach
one in order to help you master contemporary critical
theory and your own writing process. It's going to be a
strangely exciting class.

We will read a couple of novels to share the same ground on
which to talk about these theories. We'll also use Lois
Tyson's accessible text, Critical Theory Today, to study
about ten different ways to approach writing about
literature. Having read Tyson's text, it will be easier to read
the original material that generated the theory.

Each student will choose a theory from the text to 1) write
in the style of and 2) teach to the class. Don't worry, you
will only teach us after we've "seen and done" the theory.
Besides, you will choose the text that you will teach us
about, and your choices can be anything from Harry Potter
to Virginia Woolf.

Requirements: Discussion, response papers, a presentation,
and a formal paper.

ENGL 405    The Bible as
Literature           R. WHITAKER
TTH   12:30-1:45pm

Is the Bible literature?  Who wrote it?  When and why did
they write it?  How long did it take?  Are there different types
of biblical writings?  Are the biblical characters real?  Can
one truly read it with understanding?  These are just a
handful of the questions this course will examine.  To be
sure, every serious thinker must not only think-through these
questions, but also tackle the Bible itself.  It is no accident
that it tops the bestsellers list.  Within its covers, contain
tales of betrayal, sibling rivalry, murder, stories-within-
stories, comedy, tragedy, horror, melodrama, character
formation, sagas, end times, and romance.  The Bible is a
must read. 

This class is first and foremost an educational experience!  It
is truly a multidimensional, multidisciplinary, and multimedia
engagement with the Bible as a literary piece of art.  Besides
exposing the interplay between biblical content/form,
prose/poetry, and fiction/non-fiction, this class aims at
making each of us better literary critics: deconstructing
ourselves as we deconstruct the text.  If one leaves the class
thinking exactly the same way about the Bible as when they
entered, then the class has not done its job.  Although this is
not a biblical theology class, however relevant religious
motifs will be explored.  That is, this class is not meant to
support or repudiate personal convictions.  The Bible will be
studied as literature.  New trends in literary theory and
criticism of the Bible will be explored too – e.g. Marxism,
feminism, and post-colonial theory.  The Bible will be the
primary reading.  Individual books will be contextualized and
analyzed; while not losing sight of how the parts construct
the whole.


ENGL  405             The Bible as Literature                                          
P. KUHLKEN
TTH   9:30-10:45am

Catalog: Reading the poetry and prose of the King James
Bible.

This multidisciplinary, multimedia experience will
cultivate an appreciation and understanding of biblical
literaturesin their historical, cultural, aesthetic, philosophical, and
theological contexts.  Using any preferred Bible translation
 and The Literary Guide to the Bible (eds. Alter/Kermode),
we will consider the poetry, philosophy, story, and
prophecy in both the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible or Old
Testament) and New Testament, with selections from the
apocrypha and Dead Sea Scrolls.  We will analyze the genres
and strategies of biblical writing, the Bible’s
historical and cultural context, and canon formation.

As a foundation of culture—high or low—the Bible is
impossible to ignore. Biblical literacy is an unstated
assumption in much of literature (Homer, Shakespeare,
Dostovevsky, Dickinson, Flannery O’Connor, C.S. Lewis),
art (Rembrandt, Da Vinci, and Chagall), film (The Matrix),
and TV (Desperate Housewives), and the source of
over 1,000 references in Shakespeare alone. While it has
admittedly held moral and religious sway over Judeo-
Christian culture for centuries, consensus among its
subjects has never been attained, nor will it be in this
section.
The goal is for students to recreate, experience, understand,
and remember biblical stories as midrash, gaining insights
about what is meaningful and memorable: story.  Students
will approach the Bible with new questions
and gain a fresh, unbiased awareness about the enduring
significance of this best-seller, unsurpassed in world
literature, and undeniably present in our everyday
realities. 


 ENGL  491            Contemporary Topics in Literature
Gender Study Masculinities: (Órale, Waas Sappening?: Masculinity in 
Chicano/a Literature and Culture)                               
M   7:00-9:40pm                                                                             
P. SERRATO

This course explores the depiction, construction, and
deconstruction of various forms of masculinity in an array
of Chicano and Chicana texts. While developing a critical
acquaintance with the multifarious ways that masculinity
has been defined and embodied in texts that range from the
actos of Luis Valdez to the Homies line of bubblegum
machine figurines to the MySpace pages of contemporary
Chicana rappers, we will open up an intriguing critical
history of Chicano/a cultural formations and productions
that realizes that within these formations and productions,
masculinity has been both a shifting concept as well as an
increasingly contested issue.

Requirements: Include one paper, an exam, a final exam, and
frequent in-class writing.

Note: Prior knowledge of or experience with Chicano/a
literature or culture is not required or assumed.

Some of the Texts We Will Likely Cover:
Agustín Escobar, The Campaign of ’46 against the Americans
in California
Octavio Paz, The Labyrinth of Solitude
Luis Valdez, Actos
Born in East L.A.
Luis Alfaro, Down Town
Carla Trujillo, What Night Brings
Luis J. Rodríguez, Always Running
Luis J. Rodríguez, It Doesn’t Have to Be This Way
Juan Felipe Herrera, Downtown Boy
Benjamin Alire Sáenz, Sammy and Juliana in Hollywood
MySpace pages of Chicana rappers (including Esa Wicked
Chula, OG Traviesa, Mz. Gatiz, and Morenita)
Rey Mysterio Jr., Eddie Guerrero, and other professional
wrestlers
(especially members of the LWO/Latino World Order)

ENGL 494             Modern Fiction of the U.S.                                      
R. GERVAIS
MW   2:00-3:15pm

A course in fiction from around the time of World War I to
the present.  We shall start with a collection of short stories
by such authors as Cather, Fitzgerald, Porter, Steinbeck,
Malamud, Updike, Oates, O’Conner, Carver, O’Brien, and
Lahire, and read them chronologically to get an over-view of
the long stretch of literary history and a sense of the
distinctive periods within it, then we shall read two
significant short novels, Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying from the
Modern period (1920-1950) and McCarthy’s All The Pretty
Horses from the Contemporary period (1950-present).

Five in-class, open-book essay exams.


ENGL 502             Adolescence in Literature                                       
A. ALLISON
MW   2:00-3:15pm                  
                                                                                     
English 502 explores international fiction in which key
characters are adolescents, as well as works that have been
specifically written for adolescents, primarily the
contemporary Young Adult novel or short story.

Adolescence is a time during which cognitive functions such
as argumentative capacity, identity, ego, sexual
relationships and love, societal and authority relationships,
friendships, justice and conscience, bodily image, career,
education--and of course much more--are developed,
challenged, outgrown. All this makes for vibrant and timely
reading, discussion, and analysis.

Likely books include:

Francesca Lia Block, Weetzie Bat
Buchi Emecheta, The Slave Girl
Mark Haddon, The Curious Incident of the Dog…
Karen Hesse, Out of the Dust
Nancy Farmer, The House of the Scorpion
Yann Martel, The Life of Pi
Anchee Min, Red Azalea
W.D. Myers, Fallen Angels
Marjane Satrapi, Persepolis
Banana Yoshimoto, Kitchen
videos: Master Harold and the Boys, Osama
short stories by Chekov, Joyce, Boyle, Updike, and Oates

 Requirements: Four 2-3 pp. study question responses and 3
quizzes, an in-class midterm, and a final.  
                           This class is required for English Single
Subject majors.



ENGL 508W           The Writing of Criticism                                      
E. FRAMPTON
MWF   11:00-11:50am  (Literature, Theory, and the World)                                                                                                                  

This course explores theories and practices of literary
criticism, emphasizing both the work of established critics,
theorists, and authors and the development of your own
critical writing.  We will begin by addressing general
questions raised by critics and theorists about the nature of
literature generally and the history of literary criticism. 
We will then move on to an examination of various schools of
critical and theoretical thought, considering, for instance,
new criticism, psychoanalytic theory, feminist theory,
postcolonial theory, and deconstruction.  To help us
understand the issues taken up by literary scholars and
others, we will analyze exemplary fiction and poetry from
different analytical perspectives.  There will be a series of
short written assignments leading up to a longer research
essay, at the end of the semester. 


ENGL 577 Screenwriting
T TH  12:30 p.m. – 1:45 p.m.
N. KENDRICKS

In ENGL 577, the instructor will lead adventurous
students on an exploration of the screenwriters' creative
process, techniques, discipline and vital role in shaping
the content and thematic concerns of contemporary
cinema. The course's lively discourse will delve into
reading such award-winning screenplays as comic-book-
artist-turned-screenwriter Dan Clowes and Terry
Zwigoff's Ghost World, Paul Thomas Anderson's
Magnolia, Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction, and other
powerful examples of contemporary screenplays that dare
to make viewers' experiences of the cinema into an active
engagement for both the intellect and the senses.

During the course, the instructor will screen excerpts
from films (along with select feature-length and short
films to be screened in their entirety) to further examine
the screenplay's function in primarily narrative-driven
films. These examples will also facilitate engaged class
discussions on how great screenplays help to establish a
solid foundation of compelling storytelling that makes
remarkable filmmaking possible.

In addition to looking at the screenplays of established
filmmakers, this experiential course will incorporate a
workshop where students will develop and write their
own, original short-film scripts, following the format and
techniques used by working screenwriters and auteurs
alike. Students will also write either a treatment for a
feature-length, narrative film or a documentary proposal
for a non-fiction film project.
During the course's workshop sessions, students will
share their writing, as well as receive and offer feedback
to their fellow budding screenwriters.

Throughout the course's investigation of the screenplay's
central role in the filmmaking process, as well as students
crafting their original short-film scripts, ENGL 577 will
also look at how the other arts – literature, painting,
photography and other creative disciplines – often impact
the cinema and screenwriters' ambitious quests to create
compelling and insightful, moving and illuminating,
cinematic worlds.

    

ENGL 521             Early American Literature                                         
J. BROOKS
MWF   10:00-10:15am

This class examines literature written in and about the
Americas before 1800.  Since this is such a massive body
of literature, we’ll focus our inquiry around women’s
writings. What did it mean to be a woman in the Americas
before 1800? How were the pivotal and tumultuous eras of
colonization and early national formation experienced by
Native American, Anglo-American, African-American,
and Latin American women? Find out by reading their own
narratives, poems, essays, and novels of the seventeenth
through the early nineteenth centuries. This class surveys
the literary presence of women in the early Americas, as
well as representations of early American women.

Required Texts:
Catalina de Erauso, Lieutenant Nun: Memoir of a Basque
Transvestite in the New World
Aphra Behn, Oronooko, The Rover, & Other Works
Phillis Wheatley, Poems
Susanna Rowson, Charlotte Temple and Lucy Temple
Heath Anthology of American Literature, Vol A. 

Requirements: Attendance and participation, response
papers, research paper.



ENGL 523             Literature of the U.S. 1860-1920                            
R. GERVAIS
MWF   9:00-9:50am

Fiction from the age of Realism-Naturalism, when literature
turned away from what was felt to be the fantasies and
delusions of Romanticism toward what was thought to be the
more truthful treatment of material, with detailed
portrayals of everyday people, intricate attention to the
immediate surroundings, and ordinary events seen in their
true significance (Realism), but also with a dark sense of
determinism by the forces of nature, society, psychology,
and economics (Naturalism).  We will read works by Mark
Twain, Henry James, Stephen Crane, Kate Chopin, Theodore
Dreiser, Edith Wharton, and Willa Cather. 

There will be four in-class, open book, essay exams.



 ENGL 526             Topics in Literature of the U.S.                   
J. CUMMINS-LEWIS
TTH   9:30-10:45am   (Jewish American Literature)    


 
In this class we’ll explore how various authors respond to
and create Jewish American experiences through their
writing.  We’ll study the interaction between this literature
and the major historical events that affected it, including
immigration, assimilation, discrimination, the Holocaust,
the Rosenberg trial, the establishment of Israel, religious
revivalism, etc.  We will see what connects various Jewish
texts to one another as well as what might separate them,
which might include an author’s gender, ethnicity, politics,
and sexual identity.  We’ll determine if w7e are able,
ultimately, to construct a coherent definition of Jewish
American literature or if it is a genre that must be marked
by division and discontinuity. 
While this is a course
primarily concerned with literary texts, we might also
examine film and popular culture.  A preliminary list of
authors includes Abraham Cahan, Anzia Yezierska, Kate
Simon, Philip Roth, Saul Bellow, E.L. Doctorow, Cynthia
Ozick, Allegra Goodman, and Art Speigelman, among
others.


ENGL 526             Topics in Literature of the U.S.                               
L. KOOLISH
T   7:00-9:40pm          (Black Women Writers)            
     
 Required Texts:
Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God (HBJ)
Gwendolyn Brooks, Selected Poems
Alice Walker, The Color Purple (Washington Square Press)
Sherley Anne Williams, Dessa Rose  (Berkley Books)
Toni Morrison, The Bluest Eye
Toni Morrison, Beloved (Plume/NAL)
Audre Lorde, Zami
Rita Dove, Thomas and Beulah

* Lynda Koolish, ed, Required English 526 Course Reader of
poems and short stories and essays available at Cal Copy
(next to Starbuck’s on College Avenue.) The reader and
anthology includes short fiction by Toni Cade Bambara,
Edwidge Danticat and Alice Walker, and poetry by
Gwendolyn Brooks, Rita Dove, Toi Derricotte, Lucille Clifton,
and Jewelle Gomez. (Material in the reader will be indicated
by an asterisk (*) in the syllabus.

Course Requirements:
Requirements include one shorter (6-7 pages) and one
longer (8-9 page) paper on topics of student's choice (but to
be approved in advance by the instructor). Collaborative
papers are encouraged.  Graduate students will be expected
to write two 9-10 page papers, each counting for 40% of
your grade. Your essays must have a thesis, an argument, a
point of view. Late papers ordinarily will not be accepted
without a valid (i.e. family or health) reason.

One thoughtful, provocative, interesting, discussion-
engendering, open-ended discussion question or freewrite
for each week's readings is due as a Blackboard submission
by noon the day before class, so that the instructor and
other students will have the chance to read (and if they
wish, respond) to what you have written.

Grades
Shorter paper: 35%
Longer paper: 45%
Class participation (class discussions,
freewrites/discussion questions): 20%   



ENGL 533               Shakespeare                                                               
M. Grattan
W 7-9:40pm

Power hungry dukes, war-loving monarchs, murderous thanes,
sex crazed twenty-somethings, naughty bishops, liars,
adulterers and cross-dressing women: there is something for
everyone in Shakespeare's plays. In the comedies, everyone
gets married and it all works out in the end (or does it?), and in
tragedies we are glad it isn't us whose severed head is being
pranced across the stage (or are we?). In the problem plays
(Measure for Measure), we aren't really sure how to feel. In
this course, we will get our lit-crit hands dirty sifting through
the delicious muck and mire, as well as the beauty and delight,
of Shakespeare's dramatic work. Who knows, perhaps we will
even get in a sonnet or two.

Throughout the semester we will read a number of plays (ten or
so) from a range of genres to get a sense of the incredible
capacity for expressing the human experience possessed by
William Shakespeare. Along the way, we will develop our
understanding of the variety of techniques employed by the
playwright—his manipulation of language, imagery, dramatic
conventions, social issues, audience expectations, etc., —so
that we can better explore important themes and issues that
arise in the plays. As we will discover, the plays of
Shakespeare have been and continue to be fertile ground in
which audiences and readers find topics relevant to their own
lives. They remain, after all these years, living things. This is in
no small measure due to the fact that they were composed as
performances, and in addition to reading the texts we will be
viewing segments of the plays in class and independently.

Among the plays to be covered: (List subject to slight
modification.) A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Merchant of
Venice, Richard II, Henry IV Parts 1 & 2, Henry V, Hamlet,
Othello, Macbeth, Measure for Measure.  



ENGL 533               Shakespeare                                                               
C. FIELD
TTH   11:00-12:15pm

In this course, we will read eight plays by the Renaissance
playwright, William Shakespeare (1564-1616). We will
start with two comedies, A Midsummer Night’s Dream and
Much Ado about Nothing.  We will look at how the comic
storyline (involving mistaken identity and jealousy) in
Much Ado turns to tragedy in Othello, a play obsessed with
ways of “seeing,” “seeming,” and “being.” We will read
Hamlet, a tragedy whose hero poses the question of how to
live, exist, or “be” within the confines of an unjust, “rotten”
Denmark. We will then read Twelfth Night, a play that in its
celebration of drinking, eating, and cross-dressing seems to
provide an answer to Hamlet’s dilemma.  We will read one
history play, Henry V, and we will read All’s Well that Ends
Well, a so-called “problem play” because of its uneasy,
difficult ending and the predatory nature of its heroine,
Helena. We will end with one of Shakespeare’s late plays, a
romance called, The Winter’s Tale, which tries to resolve the
opposing elements of comedy and tragedy, in its tale of
Perdita, a lost woman found.

In this course, we will gain a sense of Shakespeare’s
imaginative range as a writer, dramatist, thinker, and poet. 
Specifically, we will analyze his plays in terms of genre,
poetic language, and historical context.  We will look at the
ways Shakespeare’s characters comment on and challenge
the cultural, social, and political realities of their time
(and our own). We will be doing close reading of these texts
as well as seeing them translated in performance on film.
The goal of this course is to teach you how to read and
understand Shakespeare’s writings as literary texts, as
historical artifacts of a particular time and place
(Elizabethan and Jacobean England), and as vehicles for
performance.  You will become familiar with Shakespeare’s
complex use of the English language, and you will meet some
of his most famous characters and critically analyze their
varied (and often conflicting) motives, needs, and desires.



ENGL 536             British Literary Periods, Beginning to
1660 (Gender, Food, and Culture: Food, Writing, and Identity:
Readings From the Renaissance to the 21st Century)                                      
TTH   2:00-3:15pm                                                                            
C. FIELD

This course will survey writings from the Renaissance to the
twenty-first century to explore how we construct (and make
sense of) our individual, social, and communal identities in
relationship to food.  We will begin with texts from the
seventeenth- and eighteenth-centuries: William
Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night (which celebrates feasting,
drinking, and cross-dressing), Book IX of Milton’s Paradise
Lost (Eve tempts Adam with the forbidden apple), and
Addison and Steele’s Tatler essays on chocolate, tea, and
women’s fashion.  We will then look at food in Charles
Dickens’s famous short story, A Christmas Carol, and we
will read an excerpt from Marcel Proust’s Swann’s Way. 
Other texts may include Laura Esquivel’s romantic fable,
Like Water for Chocolate, Mark Twain’s The Invalid’s Tale,
and Isak Dinesen’s Babette’s Feast, as well as excerpts and
recipes from contemporary cookbook authors, Nigella
Lawson and Alice Waters.  In all of these texts, we will look
at how the discourses of food, identity, and pleasure are
linked (or not), and we’ll explore these writers’ various
cultural stances towards food (as sacred, taboo, fetish, or
other). At the end of the course, we will also watch clips
from two recent films about food as art: the German film,
Mostly Martha, and the animated film, Ratatouille.



ENGL 537              John Milton                                                             
P. HERMAN
TTH   11:00-12:15pm

The bulk of this course will consist of an in-depth reading
of Paradise Lost, and we will situate this epic in its various
political, literary, philosophical and theological contexts.
Along the way, we will examine some of the major prose,
usually in conjunction with and as background for the
relevant sections of Paradise Lost.  We will also see how
newer approaches to literature, e.g., feminism and New
Historicism, revise and enrich previous interpretations of
Milton.  Students are advised that this will not be a class in
theology or in worshipping the transcendent text.  We will
not be looking at Milton as the culmination of a seamless
and apolitical Christian tradition, or as an exemplar of
orthodoxy. Instead, this class will look at John Milton as a
historically situated author whose works intervene, and
were meant to intervene, in the politics of his time.
Furthermore, we will not look at Paradise Lost as a
statement of religious dogma, but as a poem that continually
puts into question its own claims to truth. In other words,
we will see how Paradise Lost is animated by a poetics of
incertitude, as Milton uses this poem to confront his doubts
after the failure of the English Revolution. Evaluation will
include short papers and a substantial research paper.


ENGL 540A            English Fiction
(English Fiction Through the Long-18th Century: Home and Beyond)                                                   
W   7:00-9:40pm                                                                                                  
E. FRAMPTON

Within this course, we will analyze a variety of significant
English fiction, written between 1660 and the turn of the
eighteenth century.  In order to lend unity to our study of
this long and diverse period, we will maintain a focus on the
ways in which different narratives either imagine the space
of “home” or, alternatively, construct a sense of the world
beyond that sphere.  We will thus consider how various
writers either consolidate or subvert ideas about national
identity, through their representations of Britain, colonial
America, and Africa, within this time of intense
exploration, nation building, and institutionalized
slavery.  We will also test the hypothesis of literary
theorist Homi Bhabha, that “the recesses of the domestic
space become the sites for history’s most intricate
invasions.”  Our reading will include both well-established
writers, such as Daniel Defoe, Frances Burney, and Jane
Austin, and those who have only, in more recent decades,
begun to attract critical attention, such as Aphra Behn,
Olaudah Equiano, and the pseudonymous Unca Eliza
Winkfield. 


ENGL 543            British Literary Periods, 1800-1900
 (Victorian Literature:  Faith, Doubt, Affirmation, and Change)                                                
W   3:30-6:10pm                                                                                    
W. ROGERS

The Victorian Age is very much “in” today. Film, stage, and
musical versions abound of works by novelists who wrote
during the long reign of Victoria Regina (1837-1901). A
lulling aura of nostalgia persists about a time when “family
values” and “respect for authority” were supposedly the law
of the land. At a critical and analytical level of discourse an
intense scholarly and critical examination of the era finds
that it struggled with many of the same issues that have
extended into the present—the possibility of a vibrant
religious faith in age of scientific reductionism; the
consequences of bewildering technological change and
environmental degradation; the rights of man—and definitely
of woman—in an age of bureaucratization and centralized
control; the maintenance of democratic ideals in a society
with deep social and economic divisions. For the Victorians
themselves, self-conscious to a fault, their age appeared to
be one of “transition”—from the immemorial ways of the past
to an uncertain and problematic future.

The focus of English 543 will be on the fundamental issues
of this dynamic age—those of faith, doubt, affirmation, and
change, as seen in such writers as Thomas Carlyle, Alfred
Lord Tennyson, Robert Browning, Elizabeth Barrett
Browning,  Mrs. Gaskell, Matthew Arnold, T.H. Huxley, John
Ruskin, and Lewis Carroll.

Requirements:  Will include two examinations (one of which
will be take-home), a research essay, short written
responses, and active participation in class discussion.



 ENGL 544              British Literary Periods, 1900 – Present 
                              (Technology and Literature)                                  
MW   2:00-3:15pm                                                                                                 
L. AMTOWER

This course examines the theme of technology and its effect
on literature, the self, creativity, and society. We will read
traditional works, but we will also look at emerging forms of
narrative through games, interactive fiction, and other new
media, and we will experiment with the tools for generating
these narratives. Because of the nature of the medium, the
assignments in this course may be substantially more
challenging than you may be accustomed to.  Please be
prepared for a potentially steep learning curve. Texts: H.G.
Wells, The Invisible Man; C. S. Lewis, That Hideous Strength;
William Gibson, Pattern Recognition; Philip K. Dick, Do
Androids Dream of Electric Sheep; Marge Piercy, He, She,
and It; Stanislaw Lem, The Futurological Congress; Aldous
Huxley, Brave New World. 



ENGL 549             Topics in English Literature:                                        
J. FARBER
TTH 12:30-1:45pm     (British Poetry and Its Medium)                                                                                                            

This course will focus on British poetry from the early
sixteenth through the early twentieth centuries in relation
to its aesthetic medium.  In other words: poetry as poetry. 
We'll be looking at versification, imagery, diction,
figurative language, structure, density, tone, and resonance. 
This will be a useful course for anyone with a special
interest in poetry, and it should also be very helpful—I
would hope, even transformational—for those who feel that
they haven't yet made, but would very much like to make, a
strong aesthetic connection with the British poetic
tradition.  We’ll be reading the work of a great many poets,
beginning with Skelton, Wyatt, Surrey, Spenser, and Sidney
(and including often neglected poets such as Anne Finch,
Charlotte Smith, and Jane Taylor), but there will be
particular emphasis on Shakespeare, Pope, Keats, Christina
Rossetti, Hopkins, Yeats, and Dylan Thomas.

ENGL 563.  Literature and Culture:
The End of the Essential Black Subject in Diasporic Literature
and Cinema
S. Meigoo
Mondays 3:30-6:10

Course Description

In this course, we will consider the literary and cinematic
representation of culture, race, and ethnicity following what cultural
theorist Stuart Hall has called "the end of the essential black subject." 
Reading novels as well as screenplays, and viewing films as well as
television series episodes (Seinfeld, Curb Your Enthusiasm), we will
focus our attention on the literary works of selected writers from the
Jewish, Caribbean, and South Asian diasporas: Mordecai Richler;
V.S. Naipaul; Salman Rushdie; and Hanif Kureishi.  These four
writers have received much acclaim and criticism alike for their
satirical representation of their respective cultures.  Introspective at
best and cynical at worst, their literary works and the films that have
been based on them can be said to mark the loss of a political
innocence that is often presumed to have been conferred by racism
and colonialism on the diasporic subject.

In thus approaching the end of the innocent diasporic subject in the
works of Richler, Naipaul, Rushdie and Kureishi, we will pose the
following questions among others: Do black or diasporic artists bear a
special responsibility to represent their cultures or communities? 
What role do stereotypes play in literary and cinematic representations
of culture, race, and ethnicity?  How does literary representation differ
from cinematic representation?  To what extent are the Jewish,
Caribbean, and South Asian diasporic experiences comparable to each
other?  Although we will focus on the assigned readings by Richler,
Naipaul, Rushdie and Kureishi, class discussions may also draw on
literature, film and television, visual and plastic arts, and music and
performing arts from outside our course.
 

ENGL 570             Techniques of Poetry         
T   4:00-6:40pm                                                                                                        
J. THOMAS

In English 570, Techniques of Poetry, we will explore, as
the name suggests, various poetic techniques, ranging from
traditional rhyme and meter, to the experimental forms of
the historical and contemporary avant-garde. The class will
be conducted as a hybrid seminar/workshop. We will be
reading and discussing the work of poets as varied as John
Hollander, Lyn Hejinian, John Cage, Harryette Mullen,
Gertrude Stein, Christian Bok, Juliana Spahr, Ara Shirinyan,
and Kenneth Goldsmith. Students will write one critical
paper on poetics, give two in-class presentations, compose a
portfolio of their own poetry, and read and critically engage
the work of their classmates.




Engl 576      Literary Editing & Publishing                                                             Bruce Boston
T  3:30-6:10  Principles and Practices of Editing and Literary Publishing

This course, taught by the Managing Editor of Poetry International, will offer students an in-depth approach to the process of publishing a literary journal from solicitation and evaluation of manuscripts through the development of special features, art selection, editing, layout, design, and marketing. Students will undertake individual and collaborative projects culminating in the class publication of their own literary journals. Occasional guest speakers will address specific topics of their expertise.


ENGL 581W          The Writing of Fiction                                           
J. MESCHERY
W   4:00-6:40pm

A workshop in which participants study and apply the
techniques of fiction to their own work, as well as in their
reading and discussion of the fiction of other workshop
members.



ENGL 581W          The Writing of Fiction                                              
D. MATLIN
TH   7:00-9:40pm   

Creative writing workshop in Fiction.  Emphasis on the
disciplines of writing.  Concentration on process, awareness
of the word-by-word formation of texture, tone, the
intricate close work of balancing life events and language
and how these instances of possibility can be intensely
combined into the tangles of perception; wonders that might
include the currents of a lived world as the expressive
reservoirs of language and narrative might discover; quick,
without prediction, never standing still.  The emphasis will
include required readings, writings, and workshop
participation.



ENGL 583    Writing Long Narrative                                            
D. MATLIN
T   7:00-9:40pm

English 583 will concentrate on the processes and
disciplines involved in the writing of a novel. The course
will explore the multiple layers of a novel’s development,
and the resources that are necessary to carry the writer into
the commitment required and demanded by the art. The
focus will consist of a creative writing workshop where the
writers will read and discuss their works in progress, their
researches, and problems they confront in the evolution of
the story-life and narratives which are at once being
imagined and made. What is the act of imagining and making
and how does the writer make him or herself susceptible to
the forms or form which must be brought to breath and life
and necessity. The workshop will examine the on-going work
of writing and crafting. The course is designed to help
students realize the permissions, staminas, and risks which
are the groundwork of a novel and the living interest it
holds. The course also includes a series of defined readings
of both prose and poetry which are designed to help the
writer to, among other specific processes, find consistency
of voice, fundamental senses of identity which arise from
the human/social experience of the narrative center,
“tuning” the direct transmission of the story. Narrative can
certainly be thought of in terms of traditional building
codes, as the great story teller David Antin says, “that
keeps metaphorical inflections of discourse at bay,” or more
variously “as a multigenre strategy of summoning the
unexpected and the unimaginable, the unpredictable and the
uncanny – ultimately as a modality of tracing the dynamic,
culturally controlled production of the self.” What
transformation or transformations does narrative enact and
what are the parts and events that shape transformation or
the promise of transformation? These are some of the
questions we will explore over the next fifteen week period.

NOTE: Course offerings listed below are subject to change. 
All courses may not be listed here.  Refer to the Spring
2008 schedule or glass case in front of English and
Comparative Literature Department office for the most
current listing.


English and Comparative Literature Graduate Courses


ENGL 600            Introduction to Graduate Study                            
M. BORGSTROM
TH   3:30-6:10pm

This course will introduce students to fundamental aspects
of advanced literary study.  As Professor Brooks noted in
her description for this course in the fall semester, the goal
for this class is to help you think of literary criticism as a
long conversation that has taken place across the centuries. 
English 600 aims to prepare you to join this conversation
with an understanding of its basic critical terms, a sense of
its rules, forms, and customs, as well as a healthy sense of
your own interests, instincts, and goals as a reader
and critic. Our readings will allow us to approach the work
of literary criticism both in theory (through a review of the
big questions and important terms that have structured
contemporary literary inquiry) and also in practice
(through sustained analyses of Fitzgerald's The Great
Gatsby and Morrison's Sula).

Assignments are yet to be determined, but they will likely
include two papers (one of which will be a conference
paper), an annotated bibliography, and class presentations.


ENGL 601.
Literary Study in a Multicultural World
S. Meigoo
Mondays 7-9:40pm

Course Description

In this course, we will approach the "postcolonial condition" of
the contemporary world by reading literature not only across
different cultures but also across different genres – fiction and
nonfiction, poetry and prose, travel writing and autobiography,
history and philosophy.  We will consider the concept of the
"arrivant" as it figures in the diverse literary works of selected
writers from the English Caribbean and French Algeria: Edward
Kamau Brathwaite; V.S. Naipaul; Hélène Cixous; and Jacques
Derrida.  These four diasporic writers have provided us with a
powerful sense of the arrivant who is "always arriving" and yet
has "never arrived," disturbing the conceptual order of identity,
community, nationality, and citizenship.  The arrivant is the
migrant, the creole, the woman, the enigma of the other who
cannot be assimilated to the experience of the same.

In considering this concept of the arrivant in the works of
Brathwaite, Naipaul, Cixous and Derrida, we will also critically
attend to the significant disparities between their respective
literary and political projects.  We will pose the following
questions, among others: To what extent is the Caribbean
diasporic experience comparable to the Jewish diasporic
experience?  How is racial difference related to sexual difference? 
Is it feasible for the arrivant to sustain an absolute alterity?  What
is the relationship between the arrivant, the exile, the stranger, and
the traveller?  Although we will focus on the assigned readings by
Brathwaite, Naipaul, Cixous and Derrida, class discussions may
also draw on literature, film and television, visual and plastic arts,
and music and performing arts from outside our course.
 


ENGL 602            Literary Theory and Critical Practice                            
J. ROTHER
T   3:30-6:10pm

Given the much publicized collapse of Literary Theory over
the last decade and a half, the primary emphasis of this
course will fall upon what is left of the second half of the
course title, “critical practice,” in the wake of the
devolution of literature and literary studies into “cultural
studies,” or “whatever in the various media turns you on
and can claim more than six individuals as a fan base.”

We will at least pretend that a reconstitutable core of texts
and critical approaches has survived the recent debacle
involving Theory, its hard-corps adherents and resident
ideologues, and over a space of fifteen weeks we will attempt
to lay out the basis for a white paper on what that surviving
basis might be.  We will examine, via individual student
reports and lively discussions arising out of them, what
schools of criticism have come and gone, which hang on for
dear life and which fail to cling even to Jean Baudrillard’s
simulacrum of life, as the sun finally sets on the age of
postmodernist giants like Derrida and, well, Baudrillard. 
The dinosaurs that roamed the earth during the Jurassic
Park-days of what used to be called the “New Criticism”
will not be off bounds to us; nor will a number of other
unorthodox approaches to understanding what it means to
“understand literature” and come back to write about it,
with intelligence, unexampled insight, and a fresh take on
what Hamlet called “words, words, words.”

Requirements: Three critical papers (approx. 8-10 pages
each) and a full-length graduate paper on an individually
chosen research topic.

Required Text:  David Richter, ed., The Critical Tradition,
3rd edition. St Martin’s Press.  2003.



ENGL 604B            SEMINAR: British Literature                                        
Q. BAILEY
W   7:00-9:40pm          (Romantic Period: European
Romanticism)

Although this course will focus on the major writers of the
British Romantic Age, it will do so from the perspective of
literary and historical events in France and Germany as
much as from those in England and Scotland. When Coleridge
and Wordsworth left England for Germany in 1798 –
possibly because of fears that they might be arrested as
radicals – they wanted to learn more about the tradition that
had already inspired some of their finest work. The course
will therefore commence with a look at the early work of
Goethe and Schiller, whose pre-Romantic writings fired a
literary revolution, and trace their effects on the British
Romantics in general and Wordsworth in particular. In the
final section, we will look at the culmination (and end) of
Romanticism in the work of the French writers Gustave
Flaubert and Charles Baudelaire. 


ENGL 604D           SEMINAR: Children’s Literature                              
J. GRISWOLD
TH   7:00-9:40pm       (Golden Age of American Children’s
Books (1865-1914))                                        

The period between the Civil War and World War I is often
referred to as “The Golden Age of American Children’s
Literature.” It was a time when “the majors wrote for
minors,” when children’s books headed the bestseller lists,
when many  American children’s “classics” were written,
and when our culture was formulating new notions of the
“Child.” In this class, we will take up a number of these
classics: L. Frank Baum’s The Wizard of Oz, Frances
Hodgson Burnett’s The Secret Garden, Edgar Rice Burroughs’
Tarzan of the Apes, Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer, Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, as well as others.
At the same time, we will take an abbreviated tour of
American Children’s Literature before this period (e.g.,
colonial deathbed scenes, Longfellow, Irving, Hawthorne,
and Weem’s famous incident of the young George Washington
chopping down the cherry tree) and consider as well the
legacies of the Golden Age in juvenile offerings that
followed.
 


ENGL 606A           SEMINAR: Contemporary Feminist Poetry                 
L. KOOLISH
W   4:00-6:40pm           

The course will involve close readings of poems, with a goal
of gaining a sense both of the oeuvre of individual poets, and
of the movement known as contemporary feminist poetry in
America. We will focus on six major books of poetry :

Rita Dove,  Thomas and Beulah
Adrienne Rich, The Dream of a Common Language
Carolyn Forche, The Country Between Us
Judy Grahn, The Queen of Wands
Olga Broumas, Beginning with O
Sharon Olds, Satan Says

and one additional required text, a xeroxed course reader
edited by me, containing poems by Sylvia Plath, Denise
Levertov, Muriel Rukeyser, Toi Dericotte,  June Jordan,
Lucille Clifton, Audre Lorde, Naomi Shihab Nye, Cherríe
Moraga Joy Harjo, and others. 

Seminar participation in this course is not only encouraged,
but essential.

 Requirements: Include one shorter  (approximately 7 page)
and one longer  (approximately 10 page) paper on topics of
student's choice  (but to be approved in advance by the
instructor).  Each student will also be responsible for
leading a 15-20 minute class discussion, preparing and
distributing a brief (one to two page) ungraded
bibliographic/ biographic/critical  background summary
for one of the poets whose work we will be discussing, and –
depending on class size - for orally presenting an
abbreviated version of your final paper at the end of the
semester.  Students will also do weekly 15 minute ungraded
Blackboard freewrites, on some aspect of a single poem.
There will be no exams.

Grades

Shorter paper: 35%
Longer paper: 45%
Class participation: 20%

ENGL 626     Verge / Margins /  Border
Professor Harry Polkinhorn
Thursdays 7 to 9:40

ENGL 626 (The Border) will be a reading/discussion seminar in which students will
explore various aspects of the seminar theme. Because of our geographic
location in a major border metroplex between two nations, we see increasing
evidence of how this social/cultural context influences the full spectrum of
activities, from daily life to intellectual debates. New models for the
multitudinous processes of international exchange are being developed which
are being circulated back through the dominant societies. Elsewhere, the twin
forces of globalization and Balkanization continue to generate new kinds of
tensions. How do these tensions determine criticism?

Required weekly readings will form a basis for the examination of borders
between nations, ethnic groups, modes of discourse, languages, disciplines, and
art media, among others. Readings reflect perspectives in anthropology, literary
criticism, philosophy, and social science. The purpose of the individual research
projects is to transcend narrow disciplinary boundaries without ignoring them
while enabling students to pursue their own interests as far as possible within
the context of the seminar. Formal requirements include the prescribed
readings, a final examination, and individual projects based on extensive
outside research. This will be presented both orally in class and in written form
at the end of the semester.


ENGL 631    Form & Theory of Fiction                                        
J. MESCHERY
W   7:00-9:40pm

A seminar in which participants read and discuss the short
story in terms of craft (characterization, point of
view/narrative voice, plot and structure, style, and theme.) 
We'll examine the distinct characteristics of the short
story, as well as its advantages and limitations. 
Discussions will focus on application of techniques for
working writers.  Seminar participants will make a class
presentation and write a final paper.



ENGL 700             SEMINAR: Jorge Luis Borges
and Gabriel García Márquez 
M   4:00-6:40pm                 
J. ROBINETT

"For myth is at the beginning of literature, and also at its
end."
- Jorge Luis Borges, "Parable of Cervantes and Don Quixote"

This course will examine the work of two giants of Latin
American literature in the context of the construction of
Latin American identity and the work of the Latin American
writer. Borges, an Argentinian, is a landmark figure in
Latin America, one whose fictional innovations and thematic
preoccupations have influenced generations of writers who
have followed him both in Latin America and in Europe. 
Colombian García Márquez, like Borges, is a master
innovator whose work has become the standard against
which the current generation of Latin American writers
measure themselves.  The work of these two writers reveals
the range and depth of Latin American fiction, from Borges’
intellectual explorations of a world that exists only in the
mind and his speculations on the nature of time, creativity,
memory and reality, to García Márquez’ sprawling
landscapes of historical, political, social and fantastical
events and his carefully delineated portraits human
strength and folly.  A study of these writers will provide
students a solid grounding in Latin American literature and
thought from which to further explore that literature.

Req